How to Paint Impasto Flowers in Procreate
Studio Notes

How to Paint Impasto Flowers in Procreate

by Haze Long on Feb 04, 2026

This tutorial breaks down how to paint impasto-style flowers in Procreate by building a strong base first, then layering expressive impasto  texture on top. The focus is on brush stroke planning, value control, and structured layers rather than random texture. Each step is demonstrated visually from sketch to final detail. 

What you need

  1. Impasto Brush Pack 

General Idea

Start by reducing the reference into clear value and color relationships. The base painting must work on its own before any impasto texture is added. 

Impasto flower painting workflow in Procreate from reference to textured finish

Coloring VS Loose VS Impasto style

Common coloring, loose painting, and impasto texture create very different visual weights. Impasto relies on deliberate brush marks rather than blending or smooth transitions. It can hold just texture and might lack value/color or edge information. 

It is possible to paint loosely and overlay impasto on top of loose painting. In fact, this is encouraged in order to save time. 

Comparison of flat coloring, loose painting, and impasto texture styles in Procreate

Sketch and Rough Paint-In for Movement

Sketch loosely and block in colors while thinking about brush stroke direction. Stroke direction should support the form and flow of the flower. Design the overall brush marks by simplification and removal of redundant details. 

Sketching and planning brush stroke direction for impasto flowers in Procreate

Shadow Layer — Build Brush Marks First

Treat shadows as grouped brush strokes rather than soft gradients. A shape can be a group of brush strokes, the idea is to get the intended shape to be beautiful, spontaneous and with motion. Focus on creating beautiful brush marks first, then add color and value inside them.

Building shadow layers using grouped brush marks in Procreate impasto painting

Blacks Layer — Repeat the Same Structure

Apply the same brush mark logic to darker values. Keep strokes intentional and grouped instead of scattered.

Adding deep values with structured brush strokes in Procreate impasto painting

Brights Layer — Higher Layers Require More Planning

The higher the layer order, the more intentional the brush strokes must be. As they are more visible, the design of each shape must be pleasant. Each stroke should contribute to form, rhythm, and visual clarity. 

Painting bright highlights with intentional brush strokes in Procreate impasto style

Adding Impasto Texture in Three Steps

Touch up missing details.

Impasto texture is added using a simple three-step process: stamp the texture, drop color, then use 3D smudge to integrate it into the form.

Three-step impasto texture process in Procreate using stamp, color, and 3D smudge

Simplifying the Reference Into a Bud

Complex references can be simplified into basic shapes while preserving the same value and color placement. This keeps the painting readable and painterly.

Simplifying a flower reference into a bud while keeping value and color in Procreate

Complex Focal Point, Simple Background

Use detailed impasto texture only where you want focus. Background elements should stay simplified to support the focal flower.

Using detailed impasto texture for focal points and simplified painting for backgrounds

Detailed video tutorial here

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